HR-3525-117
Became Public Law No: 117-140.
Sponsored by Grace Meng (D-NY)
What it does
This law creates a commission to study whether a National Museum of Asian Pacific American History and Culture should be built in Washington, D.C. The commission would develop a plan for establishing and running the museum, create a fundraising strategy relying entirely on private contributions, and submit a legislative proposal to Congress. No federal funds may be spent to carry out the law.
Who benefits
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (approximately 24 million people), whose history and culture would receive dedicated national recognition. Historians, educators, and researchers focused on Asian Pacific American studies would gain a potential institutional home. Tourism and hospitality businesses near a future Washington, D.C. museum site could see increased visitors. Cultural and community organizations that contribute to or partner with the museum effort would gain visibility and resources.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct, immediate negative effect from this law, as it only creates a study commission and obligates no federal funds. Private donors solicited for the fundraising plan may face financial requests. Future legislation stemming from the commission's recommendations could affect taxpayers or compete with other Smithsonian or federal cultural priorities, but those effects are speculative at this stage.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders represent one of the fastest-growing populations in the United States, yet their contributions to American history — from building the transcontinental railroad to serving in World War II to shaping science, arts, and culture — lack a dedicated national institution on the National Mall. They contend that a museum would correct a gap in how the nation tells its own story, following the successful model of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which was also built with private funds before receiving federal support. Because this bill costs taxpayers nothing and only authorizes a study, supporters say it is a low-risk, high-value step toward fuller national representation.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a commission is the first step in a process that will ultimately result in requests for federal funding, federal land, and ongoing federal operational support — costs that are not reflected in this bill but are predictable based on the history of similar Smithsonian museums. They contend that decisions about which ethnic or cultural groups receive a dedicated national museum on the Mall involve difficult prioritization choices, and that a piecemeal, group-by-group approach is an inefficient way to represent American diversity. Some may argue that a single, expanded museum of American cultural history would serve the public better than multiple narrowly focused institutions competing for the same federal resources and visitor attention.